
Petrit Çarkaxhiu
PRISTINA, KOSOVO – Last June I was introduced to Petrit Çarkaxhiu, frontman of Jericho, by a friend at a bar in Pristina. The first thing I noticed about him – his drink order. He asked our waiter for a Coke, while everyone else at our table ordered beers. Petrit, I’d later learn, is a practicing Muslim, a minority in a country where everyone claims Islamic ancestry though seldom practices the religion. He is also one of Kosovo’s biggest rock stars – who less than a week after our interview opened for Snoop Dogg in Snoop’s first concert in Kosovo. ”Jericho is the best sound that we’ve got in Kosovo at the moment,” veteran rocker Migjen Kelmendi told me. ”They have this perfect way of articulating their songs and music that’s authentic.”
Petrit – “Rrusta” to his friends – formed Jericho (then Jericho Walls) in 1997 at the age of 19. The band’s name derives from a song by the Brit group Simply Red, though their musical influences are heavily American: Rage Against the Machines, the Beastie Boys, Public Enemy, and bands from the Seattle grunge scene like Nirvana, Pearl Jam, and Alice in Chains. During that time, in the 1990s, the Balkans was in turmoil. War was breaking up Yugoslavia … and MTV had just arrived in Kosovo.

